Artículo

Pep Guardiola had no complaints over Fabian Delph's red card after Manchester City crashed out of the FA Cup with a 1-0 defeat to Wigan Athletic.

Will Grigg's 79th-minute goal gave Paul Cook's League One side a remarkable upset triumph, ending City's hopes of an unprecedented quadruple in the process.

Guardiola was involved in a heated exchange with Cook as tempers also boiled over on the field following Delph's rash lunge on Latics midfielder Max Power during first-half stoppage time.

The City boss, who has urged officials to protect players from dangerous tackles having seen his men on the receiving end over recent weeks, described the challenge that will now rule Delph out of Sunday's EFL Cup final against Arsenal as "unnecessary".

Asked for his thoughts on the incident at a post-match news conference, Guardiola replied: "Red card. It's a red card, yeah.

"For me it's an unnecessary action and the referee decides when he decides. It can be a red card. We have to learn about that."

Guardiola was keen to dismiss any notion of lingering animosity from the touchline row, which he claimed stemmed from telling Cook to remain in his technical area.

"Nothing, just [saying] 'stay in his position'. That's all," said the Catalan, who quickly tired of questions on the subject.

"Guys, if you want to ask me about football, ask me about football. Nothing happened in the tunnel, nothing happened with my colleague. Nothing.